14 résultats
19992309948Gallimard Jeunesse 1999. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Wrapper edges rubbed ink mark on top page ridge a few pages very slightly crinkled. 1999 Trade Paperback. 465 pp. French text. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Gallimard Jeunesse paperback books
1948119969Paris 1948. paperback. 6 maps. Photographic Illus. 209pp. printed wrappers; unopened. Paris 1948.<br/><br/> unknown books
1971RH1390Cambridge:: Harvard University Press 1971. 1971. 8vo. xii 215 pp. Figs. index. Cloth dust-jacket; jacket extremities worn. Very good. Harvard University Press, 1971. hardcover books
2000218315New York: Marlowe & Co 2000. Paperback. xvi 174p. foreword introduction bibliography directory of Latino organizations very good first edition trade paperback in pictorial wraps. Marlowe & Co paperback books
20051323819New York Melbourne Madrid Cape Town: Cambridge University Press 2005. First Edition. Hardcover. Octavo; pp 486; VG-; burgundy/red pictorial spine with red and white text; no jacket; cloth has light soiling to exterior; mild wear to edges; strong boards; text block has light wear to exterior edges; ex-library with markings inside; text pages clean; illustrated;. 1323819. FP New Rockville Stock. Cambridge University Press hardcover books
19791342310Paris: Guy Tredaniel 1979. Softcover. Octavo; G/paperback; sun aged white spine with red and black text; covers show noticeable foxing to exterior; slight creases to spine; intact panels; text block edges have some foxing; minor defect to front hinge; light pencil to ffep; tight binding; frontispiece; interior clean; illustrated; pp 302; text in French. complete translation preceded by a study on the origin of hermetic books. 1342310. FP New Rockville Stock. Guy Tredaniel unknown books
1959RB1050New York:: The Academy 1959. 1959. Series: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. v. 72 art. 12. 8vo. pp. 389-558. Figs. Original printed wrappers. Fine. Co-Chaired with G.W.E. Plaut. The Academy, 1959. unknown books
1983045818Paris: Presses Universitaires de France 1983. 252p. original stiff printed wrappers Littératures modernes 32. Presses Universitaires de France unknown books
1954WRCLIT68635Rome: Botteghe Oscure 1954. Printed wrappers. First separate edition in book form of these translations by Robert Fitzgerald. One of 350 copies. Fine unopened. Botteghe Oscure unknown books
195627649Italy: Editions de Luca 1956. First edition. Paperback. Good. Paperbound book with essays on the writings of poet Rene Char. 133 pp. Some general soiling to covers. A good copy in simple printed bound wrappers. Some papges still uncut. Includes an early work by poet James Wright entitled Meditations on Rene Char. Editions de Luca paperback books
2005428313Springer 2005. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo. Cloth. 884 pp. Light shelfwear jacket with light wear else very good plus in a very good plus jacket. Springer hardcover books
1876173780Paris: Librairie De L'Art/Charles Delagrave 1876. Hardcover. VG. Marbled and 3/4 burgundy leather boards with gilt spine lettering marbled end papers. 558 pp. 52 unnumbered pages of plates. Illustrations. Text in French. Librairie De L'Art/Charles Delagrave hardcover books
1954312969Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1954. First edition. 218pp. 8vo. Half brown morocco a.e.g. Fine. First edition. 218pp. 8vo. Inscribed to Charles Edison from Menard Gertler. Harvard University Press unknown books
16105157Angers: Antoine Hernaut 1610. Hardcover. Near Fine. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. 14 ff including engraved title page by Thomas de Leu 124 pp. Bound in contemporary vellum title page in fine impression and text very crisply printed an excellent copy. Extremely rare first and sole edition of this work of polemical antiquarianism seeking to prove that the remains of St. James the Apostle are not buried at Santiago de Compostella as Europe's most pious pilgrims had believed since the 9th century but rather in the vaults of the chapel of St. Maurille Angers subsequently destroyed in 1791. An interesting and exceptionally rare example of Counter-Reformation antiquarianism in which archaeology and considerable erudition is enrolled in the service of confessional political or material interests. Imagine the result if the theory turned out to be correct-or even plausible: the medieval citadel of Angers by the 17th century a provincial backwater in the Loire would have been elevated to the third most important pilgrimmage destination in Europe-after Jerusalem and Rome. Menard relates that at the Holy Synod held in Angers in 1583 it was decided to open a mysterious tomb beneath the Chapel of St. Maurille a 5th century bishop of Angers. As his work goes on to prove in detail the tomb evidently belonged to none other than St. James the Greater among the first apostles of Christ and traditionally held to have been buried at Santiago de Compostella in Northern Spain. Verified by local ecclesiastics the discovery elicited much joy and celebration by the inhabitants of the provincial capital of Angers. Menard reveals the complex train of events which lead to Spain's false claim over St. James' relics. The apostle's grave was lost then claimed by the Spanish under the authority of Pope Leo III: Menard gives evidence that this claim was based on false evidence drawing on for example a MS in the Library of St Benoit-sur-Loire. Menard then moves on to his next logical contention: that Angers is the true resting place of St. James. Evidence in support of this ranges from the saint's 'image' at the foot of the mysterious tomb to the mosaic surrounding it which undoubtedly dates from deep antiquity. Images of the saint are apparently also found on in relief on the chairs of the choir and on a pinion near the chapel entrance. Finally certain seals found near the tomb reproduced in woodcut on pp 105-6 are certain to be from the time of Constantine the Great indicating that the site existed before it was converted into a basilica for St. Maurille d. ca. 453. Menard concludes that the current site of the Collegial de St. Maurille was originally dedicated to St. James and to St. Benoit whose relics were 'accommodated' into the current structure. The engraved title page by the esteemed Parisian Thomas de Leu 1560-1612 was commissioned for this book suggesting an exceptional amount of effort and expense in a provincially printed work. Already at the height of his fame as one of the most important engravers of his era Leu was best known for his portraits - today highly sought after. The architectural title pictures the traditional badge of Compostella pilgrims a clam shell beneath the arms of France. The Inventaire du fonds français seizième siècle I.476 lists only three title-pages designed by Le Leu of which the present is unrecorded and no other example of Le Leu's corpus has any link to Angers. . OCLC records just 4 copies worldwide none in America BnF Mannheim Berlin St. Genevieve. We have also located a copy at Angers. OCLC 492704039 Antoine Hernaut hardcover books